Coffee
Roasting
Coffee berries and their seeds undergo
multi-step processing before they become the roasted coffee
with which most Western consumers are familiar. First, coffee
berries are picked, generally by hand. Then, the flesh of the
berry is removed, usually by machine, and the seeds—usually
called beans—are fermented to remove the slimy layer of
mucilage still present on the bean. When the fermentation is
finished, the beans are washed with large quantities of fresh
water to remove the fermentation residue, generating massive
amounts of highly polluted coffee wastewater. Finally the seeds
are dried and sorted and labeled as green coffee
beans.
The next step in the process is the
roasting of the green coffee. Coffee is usually sold in a
roasted state, and all coffee is roasted before it is consumed.
It can be sold roasted by the supplier, or it can be home
roasted. The roasting process influences the taste of the
beverage by changing the coffee bean both physically and
chemically. The bean decreases in weight as moisture is lost
but increases in volume, causing it to become less dense. The
density of the bean also influences the strength of the coffee
and requirements for packaging. The actual roasting begins when
the temperature inside the bean reaches 200 °C (392 °F), though
different varieties of beans differ in moisture and density and
therefore roast at different rates. During roasting,
caramelization occurs as intense heat breaks down starches in
the bean, changing them to simple sugars that begin to brown,
changing the color of the bean. Sucrose is rapidly lost during
the roasting process and may disappear entirely in darker
roasts. During roasting, aromatic oils, acids, and caffeine
weaken, changing the flavor; at 205 °C (400 °F), other oils
start to develop. One of these oils is caffeol, created at
about 200 °C (392 °F), which is largely responsible for
coffee's aroma and flavor.
Grades of coffee roasting; from left: unroasted (or "green"),
light, cinnamon, medium, high, city, full city, French and
Italian. Depending on the color of the roasted beans, they will
be labeled as light, cinnamon, medium, high, city, full city,
French, or Italian roast. Darker roasts are generally smoother,
because they have less fiber content and a more sugary flavor.
Lighter roasts have more caffeine, resulting in a slight
bitterness, and a stronger flavor from aromatic oils and acids
destroyed by longer roasting times. A small amount of chaff is
produced during roasting from the skin left on the bean after
processing. Chaff is usually removed from the beans by air
movement, though a small amount is added to dark roast coffees
to soak up oils on the beans. Decaffeination may also be part
of the processing that coffee seeds undergo. Seeds are
decaffeinated when they are still green. Many methods can
remove caffeine from coffee, but all involve either soaking
beans in hot water or steaming them, then using a solvent to
dissolve caffeine-containing oils. Decaffeination is often done
by processing companies, and the extracted caffeine is usually
sold to the pharmaceutical industry.
Courtesy of Wikipedia
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